"A Very Long Engagement" is French director Jean-Pierre Jeunet's big budget, though generally overlooked and less successful follow up to his quirky, Oscar-winning 2001 comedy "Amelie". Both films star the petit overseas sensation Audrey Tautou, who's French A-list star power granted her a high profile gig in the good 'ole US of A to star opposite Tom Hanks in 2006's big screen adaptation of "The Da Vinci Code". Jeunet had garnered enough success in his home country as well by the mid 1990's, directing his first American film, "Alien: Resurrection" in 1997. It's quite hard to believe that this is the same director, but hey, the guy wasn't on home turf, and was working with the notorious Fox film corporation, who had seriously butchered the previous "Alien" entry in 1992 from then-newbey director David Fincher. So, back in the French saddle he goes and into his comfort zone; the quality of the filmmaking returns in the form of 2004's epic and sublime "A Very Long Engagement".Monday, May 3, 2010
"A Very Long Engagement" (2004)
"A Very Long Engagement" is French director Jean-Pierre Jeunet's big budget, though generally overlooked and less successful follow up to his quirky, Oscar-winning 2001 comedy "Amelie". Both films star the petit overseas sensation Audrey Tautou, who's French A-list star power granted her a high profile gig in the good 'ole US of A to star opposite Tom Hanks in 2006's big screen adaptation of "The Da Vinci Code". Jeunet had garnered enough success in his home country as well by the mid 1990's, directing his first American film, "Alien: Resurrection" in 1997. It's quite hard to believe that this is the same director, but hey, the guy wasn't on home turf, and was working with the notorious Fox film corporation, who had seriously butchered the previous "Alien" entry in 1992 from then-newbey director David Fincher. So, back in the French saddle he goes and into his comfort zone; the quality of the filmmaking returns in the form of 2004's epic and sublime "A Very Long Engagement".Tuesday, April 27, 2010
"Tsotsi" (2005)

Saturday, April 17, 2010
"Children of Heaven" (1997)


Monday, April 5, 2010
"Amores Perros" (2000)


Sunday, March 28, 2010
"Bombay" (1995)

The film's third act centers around actual events that occurred in Bombay from late 1992 into early '93. Our new family, after years of having settled down in their nice new apartment, with Shekhar continuing work as a journalist and Shaila at home raising the kids, now find themselves in the heat of religious extremism. Religious riots break out in Bombay, leaving hundreds of Hindus and Muslims dead. How utterly inane; civil war amongst the same people, with dead men, women, and children left in its wake. And now our loving, handsome young couple's livelihood is in jeopardy, a target of violence from both sides, and the safety of their two young boys is promptly at stake. The film takes quite a turn here, going from a relatively quiet love story, to dramatic chaos and violence. It is this latter half of the film that makes it border on epic; hundreds of extras in turmoil amongst the grimy Bombay streets. Gritty and realistic, well choreographed, convincing riots abound; mosques are set ablaze, people are beaten, trampled over, burned alive, and to add to the horror, Shekhar and Shaila's boys get swept into it all and wind up separated, not only from their mother and father, but from themselves. And it is all very dramatic, as the wildly distressed couple bravely venture out into the rioting streets to locate their separation-anxiety-ridden children, all the while not knowing if they are alive or dead.
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
"Dreams" (1990)


Wednesday, February 24, 2010
"Not One Less" (1999)

We are thrown into a dusty, rural China and a very primative mountainside schoolhouse. Schoolteacher Gao's mother is on her deathbed, so he must leave the school for a month to be with her. It is more than obvious just how little they have over there, in that the village mayor's only option for a substitute teacher is 13 year old peasant Wei Minzhi, who is not only just a couple years older than the students, but is completely ill-equiped for the job. Her only abilities encompass reciting (quite poorly) one or two songs, and copying text. The circumstances are dire, and the schoolhouse moreso. There is no clock; Wei is instructed to have the students leave once the sun hits a certain spot on the wooden post in the classroom. Adjoined to the classroom is the teacher's "office", a primitive little room where Wei is to reside off class hours and sleep with the female students in a tiny bed. Before Gao departs, he stresses to his young subordinate the importance of not being wasteful with the school's depressingly limited resources, namely the chalk. His final instructions to the all-too-eager-to-be-paid Wei is to not lose one student (as he has already lost nine or ten), and if she can maintain the roster she will receive an additional 10 yuan (which I believe is about $1.25).
Thursday, February 4, 2010
"La Femme Nikita" (1990)

Edgy French director Luc Besson's 1990 overseas hit "La Femme Nikita", could be said to be the catalyst for the many lone femme fatale action heroines that we have come to see in many Hollywood films since. Hollywood had even adopted "Nikita" for an American version three years later titled "Point of No Return" starring Bridget Fonda. And it had even been made into a short lived television series by the late '90s. "Nikita"'s success marked the jump overseas for Besson, who went on to direct memorable, hit American films such as "The Professional" (starring Nikita's own Jean Reno) and "The Fifth Element" starring Bruce Willis. While masculinity dominated the muscle-bound, testosterone-laden blockbuster actioners of the 80's, Nikita would be the film to kickstart the decade where much of that began to change. The female-empowered era of the 90's saw many films with the classic "shoot-em-up" action heroine remniscent of Besson's breakthrough hit.
In "Nikita" Besson creates a noirish, Europunk world that we are instantly introduced to in the film's kinetic opening. It is here where we meet the eccentric and feral Nikita (energetically played by Anne Parillaud), who is a strung out junkie involved in a botched drug store robbery, which in turn ends up in the slaying of a police officer at the hands of our eponymous heroine. Facing capital punishment, she is surreptitiously taken in by a secret government agency, and one man who had seen potential in her wild, violent personality. As Nikita's new government boss, Bob gives her an opportunity for a new life. He has the old Nikita written off; she is officially dead now. And so his prospect for Nikita, in exchange for her dismal conviction, is for her to be reborn as a deadly assassin, working for him under this underground, covert organization. What is interesting is that this beggining is remniscent of "Pygmalion", in that a man of authority and stature takes a scruffy, feral young women under his wing and proceeds to mold her into a lady, though in the case of "Nikita", not only a lady, but a trained killer. And also similiar is the subtle love affair between Nikita and her mentor.
Nikita immediately undergoes a training program that hones her skills as an assassin, though she is quite difficult and rebellious at first. She plays ball, however (as she has no choice) and she soon learns that just as important as it is for her to become adept at utilizing a vast assortment of weapons, hand to hand combat, and technical and computer skills, it is just as important for her to learn to be a lady. And so after the training regiment scenes we finally see her being coached by a woman in the department of femininity. And as we watch Nikita applying her makeup, we notice just how beautiful she really is, and a further connection to the character is made, as we now see her human, "femme" side, and she is no longer the tantrum throwing wild child that we had gotten to know up until this point. When Bob reluctantly sends her off to be on her own into French society under a new name, Nikita openly admits to him, "I'm scared". This upped the likeability factor for me, because I like and am able to relate to characters who are vulnerable and imperfect, as most moviegoers do. Nikita is particularly charming when she's out on her own shopping for groceries, trailing a woman and buying a whole lot of whatever she buys. She then happens upon Marco, the store clerk (amused by her great stockpiling of ravioli), whom she immediately develops a romantic relationship with and winds up living with her in her shoddy, impoverished apartment. We see, through this, that after all she is indeed a real woman, sensitive, with desires and a longing for normality and security and partnership. Though despite this, she is still engaged to her reborn self as the assassin "Josephine", having to recieve a call from the agency in regards to a new hit, always, of course, when she's at her most comfortable with Marco. There is no way out of these fatal assignments; she is inexorably stuck in this life. And we see how Nikita's boss intends to keep her their, as he clearly loves her. This is evident in the scene where Bob is invited to her place for dinner with Marco, when he covers for Nikita when the gullible Marco presses about her past, particularly her childhood. And in turn we see the tell-tale expression of gratefullness and love in her own way for Bob on Nikita's face.
Nikita particularly excells in it's well edited and choreographed action scenes, complimented by a throbbing synth soundtrack that really pumps up the atmosphere and energy. There is a particularly tense scene in which Nikita must execute a target right from her Venician hotel room. Room service is on the way when she gets the call at the most inoportune moment, interupting some romantic play between Nikita and Marco. So she must suddenly drop what she's doing, locate and assemble her previously planted weapon in the bathroom, get into sniping postition from the window, while corresponding with intelligence to get the target update via headset, as Marco questions her from just outside the bathroom. It's a well shot, nerve-racking sequence and we can see the tremendous stress and strain that is being put on Nikita, as she is trying to be what she is and live a normal life with her man, all the while keeping her true occupation a secret from him. Finally taking its toll, this leads to her inevitable attempts to get out of the life, and of course Marco gets wise to her secret after a particularly botched job where a cleaner (the always reliable Jean Reno) is called into play. And so the film ends with Marco confronting Bob in person, with the materials from the botched job that Bob requires, as he had already intended on hunting Nikita down for them. So the two men from both sides of the line ultimately lose their love; Nikita is left to simply walk the earth, as the audience is left to surmise for themselves once the end credits abruptly appear.
